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Grandaddy's Heroic Day

8/23/2019

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Everyone got into camp and put up tents and beds before dark. It was a hard day of driving and it felt good to stretch out on an air mattress and listen to the cicada singing in the tall trees. No one was awake long.

Sleeping in the woods is done between dark and sunrise. The smell of campfires  perfume the air with coffee and bacon. It was still early when Jake and Kevin began exploring the campground boundaries. For Hannah this place was nostalgic, and exciting because she hadn’t been here in seven years. For Jake and Kevin it was exciting because they had never been here.

“We want to go on a hike!” Well, we had been talking about hiking; about how to manage time in four short days to have as many experiences as possible. This was the first morning and they wanted to explore the woods around the campground.

“ I know a short nature trail here in the campground. It is an easy one mile loop; half mile up the knob, half mile down.”

Of course Cheyenne had to come along. At five years old she was a better hiker than some already, and she had a different list of things to bring. One bottle of water, which someone else would carry, and her special toy, a fingerling monkey named Valentina.

Half mile walk up the knob, stopping twice to rest. The second half was all down the hill. It was near the bottom where Hannah asked Cheyenne, “Where is your fingerling toy?”

Cheyenne began to panic. Jake and Kevin tried to console her by assuring her that they would hike the trail again later and probably find the toy, but she wanted something to happen now! Valentina couldn’t be left alone in the woods!

It was obvious no one wanted to traverse the uphill climb again. Not right now. This was real to Cheyenne! She had walked up and down the same ridge and she would gladly do it again if someone would go with her. This was too important to just give up because you are tired. She was just too young to go alone.

“I’ll see you all back at camp.”

And the old man turned and stepped briskly up the slope they had just descended until he was out of sight. The idea was to trace backward each step and search the trail for that little blue plastic monkey. Up, up, up the hill; breathing harder every step, interrupting the rhythm of inhaling and exhaling only long enough to utter a small short prayer.

“Lord, please help me find that little blue monkey!”

Shannon was always losing things and whenever she did she would always say this little prayer and then whatever she was searching for would turn up! Crazy small things like the diamond stone in her wedding ring that are hard to see! She always credits that little prayer for the recovery of things lost. If it works for Shannon, then it couldn’t hurt.

What an old man needs after walking a mile and half up and down the hill and getting the heart rate up is a short rest. The prayer that had been repeated during the ascent had been replaced by an internal beckoning to stop. Relax. Rest a moment and reorient yourself.

Coming down the last half mile were the two places where the group had stopped to rest on the way up. The second was on a one hundred eighty degree bend in the trail. A good place to rest against a tree and see the trail ahead and behind. A good place except looking down the trail the sun was breaking through the trees and illuminating the opening in the forest with brilliant light like some throne room description in the Bible. And there it was! At first just a silhouette outlined against the sunlight, and with each deep breath the eyes began to focus until it was clearly Valentina! Not on the ground but hanging by her crooked tail on a branch of a sapling where Cheyenne had placed her to rest earlier! “Thank you God!”

Cheyenne was playing near the tents when Grandaddy appeared from across the camp site. The other hikers had moved on to the next great adventure-ice cream and souvenir shopping at the camp store. Cheyenne kept staring as Grandaddy came closer and there was this magical moment when she first saw it. In his hand was Valentina. That little blue fingerling! Her first glimpse wasn’t enough but after a second or two it became reality! It really was!

Cheyenne made up a song that night about her day, and about hiking in the woods, and about how Velentina got lost and how her Grandaddy saved the day! It was a good song. It was a good day to be Grandaddy!

Rest and reflection can help us catch our breath and reorient and often that is all we need to gain a new perspective on things. And it never hurts to pray!   



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Pastor's Notes - July 2019

7/30/2019

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When people ask about Wylie Christian Church, often times we think about the praise team/band-The Red Dirt Disciple Band. Some may reference Bible study or formation groups or youth led worship while others may try to describe the diversity of the congregation or the slightly off center style of the pastor!
Recently I was asked a more direct question. “What is your church doing in the community?”

This caught me off guard. It’s not that I didn’t know the answer, I just don’t talk as much about mission when I am describing our congregation. Maybe I never imagined people were that interested in boring outreach. Surely we would attract more folks by boasting of our good music or engaging programs. Lead with your best foot! Right?

Well, there I was. Seated in our worship space in front of a delegation from another congregation, and I began to answer the question. I began by describing our Christmas shoe box program. How it grew out of the Our House project. How real the need is and how small our effort. I talked about watching young people open those boxes. I talked about watching members in church assembling boxes, and how even visitors participate; how some folks only come for this kind of Sunday. While I was describing those scenes I began to weep. I tried to fight back the emotion. I was almost embarrassed and even apologized.

The more I described our church in mission, the more I realized how much we are doing, and what cool stuff it is! The Boys and Girls Club relationship: the various youth organizations that use our facility for sports activities or to cook for and mentor young men: the year long sock drive: Sunday breakfast: mailboxes for shut-ins and in-mates!

I remember over the years when I would ask folks why they had decided to join our congregation, the answer was not that often music or theology. The answer was most often mission. It was always about our involvement in the community and in peoples lives; and not just church people.

Congregations today seem to be moving back into neighborhoods; where people are. Unlike the “Golden Era” they are not asking what the neighborhood can do for the church, but finding ways to serve the neighborhood. Churches in mission, like ours, attract members and experience growth when it looks like they are going to give it all away in service to others. We grow in our own faith as we serve our neighbors.

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    Rev. Doug Roysden

    Senior Pastor, Wylie Christian Church

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